107 minutes
8/24/1942
During the Nazi occupation of Belgium during World War II, a Belgian resistance group revives the newspaper "La Libre Belgique" to expose and counter Nazi propaganda efforts to deceive the people. They are so effective that the Nazis offer a reward for the capture of the paper's staff, although they don't know their identities. One of them is a well-known entertainer, and when his jealous partner hears of the reward, he turns him in. The paper's publishers escape capture, but their staff doesn't. The paper's founders must find not only a way to keep from getting captured by the Nazis but keep their newspaper going and get their staff released.
Eric Portman
as Andre Delage
Phyllis Calvert
as Julie Lanvin
Griffith Jones
as Father De Gruyte
Peter Glenville
as Charles Neels
Frederick Culley
as Victor Lanvin
Raymond Lovell
as Von Koerner
Irene Handl
as Frau Von Koerner
Carl Jaffe
as Kohlmeier
Stuart Lindsell
as Press Officer
Felix Aylmer
as Colonel Von Hohenstein
Eliot Makeham
as Abbé De Moor
J.H. Roberts
as Father Corot
Walter Hudd
as Van Heemskerk
Aubrey Mallalieu
as Louis Baeker
Ben Williams
as Arthur Baeker
Arthur Goullet
as Gaston
John Slater
as Theophile
Philip Godfrey
as Lou
Lloyd Pearson
as Cabaret Manager
Phyllis Monkman
as Pony Act
Kathleen Boutall
as Pony Act
Ian Fleming
as Newspaper Editor
Edward Rigby
as Barbershop Customer